Porter County, Indiana

A Part of the Indiana GenWeb Project

Historical Images of Porter County

Bartholomew & McClelland, Civil War Token, 1863
Valparaiso, Indiana

Date: 1863Source Type: Civil War tokenPublisher, Printer, Photographer:
Bartholomew & McClellandPostmark: Not applicableCollection: Steven R. ShookRemark:During the American Civil War, coins issued by the
government began to experience a severe decrease in circulation as citizens
hoarded coins containing gold, silver, and copper. As a
result, transacting business became increasingly difficult as the war progressed.
Many merchants therefore contracted to have private minters produce tokens as a
proxy for government issued coinage. H. A. Ratterman, of Cincinnati, Ohio, was
the first merchant to circulate privately minted tokens during the fall of 1862.
The United States Congress, however, banned the usage of non-government issued
coins on June 8, 1864, when it enacted 18 U.S.C. § 486; this law made the
minting and usage of privately minted coins illegal and punishable by a prison term of up to
five years, a fine of up to $2,000, or both. In Valparaiso, the dry goods merchants
Bartholomew & McClelland issued two types of copper tokens. Both types have one
side that is identical, reading "BARTHOLOMEW & McCLELLAND - DRY GOODS -
VALPARAISO, IND. - BOOTS SHOES &c." One version of the token has a reverse
side reading "UNITED STATES CAPITAL 1863" and includes an image of the
capitol building in Washington, D.C. and eight stars, while the other version of
the token has a reverse side reading "THE FLAG OF OUR UNION 1863" and
includes an image of the American flag with a Liberty cap atop the flag pole and
thirteen stars. Artillus V. Bartholomew and Marquis L. McClelland formed a
partnership in the dry goods business in Valparaiso in 1862, a partnership that
continued for four years when McClelland left the partnership to pursue other
business interests. Bartholomew continued in the dry goods business for many
years after the dissolution of the partnership.